One-dimensional window on superconductivity, magnetismAtoms are proxies for electrons in ultracold optical emulator

BY JADE BOYDRice News staff

A Rice University-led team of physicists is reporting the first success in a three-year effort to build a precision simulator for superconductors using a grid of intersecting laser beams and ultracold atomic gas.

The research appears this week in the journal Nature. Using lithium atoms cooled to within a few billionths of a degree of absolute zero and loaded into optical tubes, the researchers created a precise analog of a one-dimensional superconducting wire.

JEFF FITLOW

Rice University graduate student Yean-an Liao created a precise analog of a one-dimensional superconducting wire by trapping ultracold lithium atoms in a grid of laser beams.

Because the atoms in the experiment are so cold, they behave according to the same quantum mechanical rules that dictate how electrons behave. That means the lithium atoms can serve as stand-ins for electrons, and by trapping and holding the lithium atoms in beams of light, researchers can observe how electrons would behave in particular types of superconductors and other materials.

“We can tune the spacing and interactions among these ultracold atoms with great precision, so much so that using the atoms to emulate exotic materials like superconductors can teach us some things we couldn’t learn by studying the superconductors themselves,” said study co-author Randy Hulet, Rice’s Fayez Sarofim Professor of Physics and Astronomy, who is leading a team of physicists at Rice and six other universities under the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency’s (DARPA) Optical Lattice Emulator (OLE) program.

In the Nature study, Hulet, Cornell University physicist Erich Mueller, Rice graduate students and postdoctoral researchers Yean-an Liao, Sophie Rittner, Tobias Paprotta, Wenhui Li and Gutherie Partridge and Cornell graduate student Stefan Baur created an emulator that allowed them to simultaneously examine superconductivity and magnetism — phenomena that do not generally coexist.

Superconductivity occurs when electrons flow in a material without the friction that causes electrical resistance. Superconductivity usually happens at very low temperatures when pairs of electrons join together in a dance that lets them avoid the subatomic bumps that cause friction.

Magnetism derives from one of the basic properties of all electrons — the fact that they rotate around their own axis. This property, which is called “spin,” is inherent; like the color of someone’s eyes, it never changes. Electron spin also comes in only two orientations, up or down, and magnetic materials are those where the number of electrons with up spins differs from the number with down spins, leaving a “net magnetic moment.”

“Generally, magnetism destroys superconductivity because changing the relative number of up and down spins disrupts the basic mechanism of superconductivity,” Hulet said. “But in 1964, a group of physicists predicted that a magnetic superconductor could be formed under an exotic set of circumstances where a net magnetic moment arose out of a periodic pattern of excess spins and pairs.”

Dubbed the “FFLO” state in honor of the theorists who proposed it — Fulde, Ferrell, Larkin and Ovchinnikov — this state of matter has defied conclusive experimental observation for 46 years. Hulet said the new study paves the way for direct observation of the FFLO state.

“The evidence that we’ve gathered meets the criteria of the FFLO state, but we can’t say for certain that we have observed it. To do that, we need to precisely measure the distribution of velocities of the pairs to confirm that they follow the FFLO relationship. We’re working on that now.”

The research was funded by the Army Research Office with funds from the DARPA OLE program, the National Science Foundation, the Office of Naval Research, the Welch Foundation and the Keck Foundation.

About Jade Boyd

Jade Boyd is science editor and associate director of news and media relations in Rice University's Office of Public Affairs.